Injectable material will deliver therapy, technology in human body

A new injectable material designed to deliver drug therapies and sensor technology to targeted areas within the human body is being developed by a Texas A&M University biomedical engineer who says the system can lock its payload in place and control how it is released.

The research, led by Michael McShane, professor in the Department of Biomedical Engineering who specializes in biomaterials, and graduate student Jason Roberts, appears in “Journal of Materials Chemistry B.” It details the development of a carrier system embedded with microscopic capsules that act as tiny reservoirs for medicines or even sensors that would alert a person in critical instances, such as when blood-sugar levels change.